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Right after you were born, the blood and vernix on your body was washed off by a nurse or even your mom or dad. Have you taken a bath or shower since the day you were born? Of course you have. Our bodies continually become dirtied, requiring new cleansing. It...
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John 6 records two eventful days in the incarnate life of Jesus Christ. The miracle of the feeding of the five thousand occurred on the first day. That day also ended with another miracle, that of Jesus walking on the water. The second day was a bit different. This day was filled with teaching, and it was teaching that was not well received by the great crowds. Jesus stood before this crowd and identified Himself as the bread of life and as the exclusive way to His Father (John 6:35-40).
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Join us on August 11, 2017, for a special conference at the Stadthaus Exerzierhalle in Wittenberg, Germany to commemorate the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation and to learn from Luther in our twenty-first century. Together with Drs. W. Robert Godfrey, Steven Lawson, Albert Mohler, and others we will consider the life of Luther, the doctrines he proclaimed, and the means by which the Reformation was sustained, drawing lessons for the church in the present.
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The Westminster Shorter Catechism has an excellent definition of repentance in Question 87: "Repentance unto life is a saving grace, whereby a sinner, out of a true sense of his sin, and apprehension of the mercy of God in Christ, doth, with grief and hatred of his sin, turn from it unto God, with full purpose of, and endeavor after, new obedience."
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Even though we are gracious, kind, patient, friendly, and sensitive to people’s dignity, we cannot remove altogether what the New Testament calls the offense of the gospel because the gospel does call people to repentance, and people are threatened by that.
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In the early fifth century, a theological controversy occurred that would forever shape the thinking of the church. In his Confessions, Augustine of Hippo wrote in the form of a prayer the words, "Give what Thou commandest and command what Thou will." The British monk Pelagius was upset by these words, believing that they would give Christians an excuse for not obeying God.
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We are very pleased to announce that Dr. R.C. Sproul will now be joining us, health permitting, for our upcoming regional conference in Lancaster, PA on October 28-29. He will also participate in the free sacred music concert following the conference on Sunday evening.
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